Saturday, March 29, 2008

A bit of perspective for MSU fans...

Six of the Eight sweet 16 games in this year's tourney were blowouts.


1) Washington State lost to NC, a #1 Seed by 21, 47-68

2) Stanford lost to Texas, a #2 seed by 20, 62 to 82

3) Tennessee lost to Louisville, a #3 seed by 19, 60-79

4) Wisconsin lost to Davidson, a #10 seed by 17, 56-73*

5) MSU lost to Memphis, a #1 seed by 18, 74 to 92

6) Villanova lost to Kansas, a #1 seed by 15, 57-72

*I put Wisco above State 'cause they lost to a #10 seed
by one less point than MSU who lost to a #1 seed.



The other two games :

W. Kentucky lost to UCLA, a #1 seed by 10, 78-88
W. Virginia lost to Xavier a #3 seed by 4, 75-79

Also :
Only 3 teams out of 37 games all season scored more points
against Memphis than MSU, who scored 74

Ouch.

Well that sucked.

I don't know if I've ever seen a team down 30 points at the half. Memphis looked scary big and fast the first time I watched them play last weekend, but I thought in some way we could match up. The Spartans had to come out in this game firing and fighting with blood in their eyes and on their lips, but looked more confused and timid than anything. They had to come out with confidence and take it to Memphis with force but failed miserably. Disjointed and stymied, our leaders fell flat.

I sat wondering aloud what you tell a team that is down 30 at halftime. Izzo must have come up with something or possibly even let the silence speak for itself, but whatever took place in that locker room, the second half opened with Memphis going up four more points to +34, then somehow The Spartans decided to play basketball, coming back 20 points, saving face and cutting the lead to 14.

We didn't lose by the biggest margin yesterday across the sweet 16 games played, but we were made the fools on a national stage on Friday night. The saddest thing is most people turned off their TVs before seeing our boys in green rally back and end the game with some semblance of dignity. Another bright spot was seeing Chris Allen finally play up to his potential.

To make it through last weekend by beating a PITT team that pretty much everyone said would beat us and making it to the Sweet 16 again is something to build on for next year when the class coming in will be faster and more athletic.

Here's to Drew Neitzel and Naymick for giving State some great years of basketball.


Hold your head high Spartan.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Dickie V's Take on Tonight...



Vitale: Sweet Sixteen Preview (Friday Edition)

Dick Vitale
SPECIAL TO ESPN.COM

The second half of the Sweet 16 is going to be exciting. Friday night's action will finalize the Elite Eight.


Memphis vs. Michigan State

This is my linguini special, two guys I truly love in paisons Tom Izzo and John Calipari.

You can talk about Drew Neitzel, Chris Douglas-Roberts or Derrick Rose as the key player in this match-up. I feel it will be Joey Dorsey; he must be brilliant on the glass and in the lane like he was against Mississippi State before foul trouble hit. Dorsey is going against four very physical frontcourt players for the Spartans – Goran Suton, Drew Naymick, Idong Ibok and Marquise Gray. You can also factor in Raymar Morgan in this equation.

If Dorsey is rebounding, and doing the things he can physically on the interior, Memphis will be tough to beat. The Tigers are athletic and can run.

Calipari may be concerned with the fact Douglas-Roberts is from the Motor City. Will the superstar try to play beyond himself because of bragging rights against all of his buddies from Michigan State.

Even though he denies it, free throw shooting could be an Achilles heel for Memphis. So far in the tournament, the Tigers have missed 30 from the foul line. Will it eventually catch up with them?

The Spartans need Neitzel and Kalin Lucas to duplicate their performance enjoyed against Pittsburgh. If they struggle, they will get blown out. If that duo plays to its potential, this could be shock city.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Let's hope they're right...



I just took an ESPN Poll. Let's hope the 229,199 other people who have taken the poll so far are right about what's about to go down in the tournament : Total Votes: 229,199


1) Which team will win the East Regional?

49.5% North Carolina


2) Which team will win the Midwest Regional?

46.9% Kansas


3) Which team will win the South Regional?

48.5% Michigan State


4) Which team will win the West Regional?

72.3% UCLA


5) What was the biggest surprise of the first two rounds?

34.5% (12) Western Kentucky's buzzer-beating 3-pointer over (5) Drake


6) Which No. 1 seed is most likely to lose before the Final Four?

76.1% Memphis


7) Who has been the most outstanding player of the first two rounds?

42.0% Drew Neitzel, Michigan State
29.8% Stephen Curry, Davidson


8) Which Cinderella is most likely to reach the Final Four?

59.5% (5) Michigan State
18.8% (10) Davidson


9) How many of your Final Four teams remain?

50.9% 4


10) Which team will win the NCAA tournament?

42.6% Michigan State
21.3% North Carolina

A bit of Brevity : You've gotta see this...

CBS Sports breaks down MSU-Temple matchup

Posted by Chris Mackinder March 18, 2008 19:31PM MLive

Gary Parrish and another CBS Sports reporter break down the Michigan State/Temple matchup and both seem to be leaning toward Michigan State in the game.

A few other statistical numbers for you:

-ESPN SportsNation likes the Spartans by an 80 percent to 20 percent margin.
-Accuscore, which simulates each game more than 100,000 times, has MSU winning 66 percent of the matchups.

Spartans want to run with Memphis

by Steve Grinczel March 25, 2008 00:30AM MLive

EAST LANSING -- The misconceptions and misrepresentations of the Michigan State basketball team have begun anew.

On Sunday night, for example, ESPN studio analyst Digger Phelps said that if Memphis is able to lure MSU into an up-tempo transition game in the NCAA tournament South Region semifinals in Houston, it will spell dire consequences for the Spartans.

Phelps apparently is oblivious to the fact Michigan State would like nothing better than to have the 9:57 p.m. game at Reliant Stadium turn into a track meet.
Memphis, the region's top seed and ranked No. 1 in the nation for much of the season, is known for terrific athletes and the ability to run opponents into the floor boards with a withering fast break.

Fifth-seeded MSU, meantime, is stereotyped as a halfcourt team because of the numerous sets and plays coach Tom Izzo employs out of necessity during the Big Ten grind.

However, to suggest the Spartans (27-8) do not want to run with the Tigers is just plain wrong.

"I do see this as an up-and-down game," Izzo said Monday at his regular weekly news conference. "I hope it is an up-and-down game because I think we have enough depth and we can run, and they are going to run.

"Their break is as good as anybody's in the country, so I'd have to agree with Digger on one thing," Izzo added with a laugh. "But only one."

Izzo spent much of last week trying to debunk the perception that the Spartans are ultra-physical and win by putting opposing players in hammer locks until they cry "uncle."

The Spartans out-toughed a hard-nosed Pittsburgh team in Saturday's second-round game in Denver to advance to the Sweet 16 for the seventh time in 11 years, but "that was not a slugfest like it was made out to be," Izzo said.

Despite Phelps' assessment, Izzo has never made a secret of the fact he would be happiest if he never had to call a play and every MSU basket came off an easy layup that finished a fast break.

The reality of the situation is that Big Ten opponents know this and take great pains to stop the Spartans' running game.

Some teams do not even contest offensive rebounds because they know Michigan State will dominate the boards and want to use missed shots to fuel its break. It's better to get all five players back on defense where they can clog up the running and passing lanes.

If Memphis (35-1) really wants to frustrate MSU, it will walk the ball up like Iowa did in its 43-36 upset of the Spartans in Iowa City, and run the shot clock down to five seconds to limit the number of scoring opportunities. Michigan State had a season-low 16 field goals in that game.

But that would be totally out of character for the Tigers, and the Spartans are thrilled.

"Of course, why not?" said freshman guard Kalin Lucas, who is at his best when he can use his speed and quickness in the open court. "It's going to be a fast-paced game and very physical."

Lucas scored the game-clinching layup against Pitt on a run-out after senior guard Drew Neitzel rebounded a 3-point miss and passed to him for a one-man break.

Michigan State had just eight fast-break points, but they felt so liberating.

"In the Big Ten, teams try to take our break away," Lucas said. "We were able to run a little bit better (against Pitt), and I think we'll be able to do the same thing in this game and still run our offensive plays."

With All-American freshman guard Derrick Rose running the show, Memphis is averaging just fewer than 80 points per game compared to MSU's 71, so Izzo does not necessarily want to see the game get into the 90s.

"What I hope we do is somewhat stop some of their fast break, or, contain it would be a better word because I don't think you're going to stop it.

"I thought (Phelps) would tell me to zone (defend) them because that's what he usually tells me."

Calipari expects a battle

Phelps isn't the only one who might be surprised to see MSU run wild.

"They (the Spartans) play a grind-it-out game offensively," Tigers coach John Calipari said Monday during a news conference in Memphis. "They're used to an every-possession-matters-type game, because you're not going to have a lot.

"You are not going to have the normal 80-possession games. Those games are going to be down in the 60's because of how they play. They run great stuff, but they really grind it out."

Maybe Calipari thinks he is playing Iowa.

Multi-faceted opponent

On the other hand, Izzo said in the event MSU does stop Memphis' transition game, and its dribble-penetration and kick-out passes, it has to be ready to defend in the halfcourt.

"I think Memphis' offense is unique," Izzo said. "And yet, John is a good coach and as he said to me a couple weeks ago, he's still running more plays now instead of just that offense. I think that's because sometimes too much freedom can hurt you, too.

"You try to find warts you can exploit," Izzo said. "I haven't found a lot yet. But it's only Monday and hopefully by (today) we'll find a few more."

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Next Up : PITT

Watching the PITT / Oral Roberts game. A big note, PITT only had 3 pts five minutes into the game. I hope State runs like they can and their deep bench pulls us into the Sweet Sixteen.

1st Round Against Temple


The Spartans put it on the floor today. I went into San Francisco and sat with my friend Morgan at The Kezar Pub for the game. A great bar - order the Irish Breakfast if you go (no, that isn't three shots of Bushmill's). The biggest thing about today's game? Neitzel only had three points at the half and late into the second and MSU was up by 20 at one point. I think they'll put it ALL together against PITT on Saturday.

2008 BBall Tourney

It's time to shine Spartans. Let's hope our boys in green make it at least to the sweet 16. Go green.